2021
DOI: 10.3389/frwa.2021.764459
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A Global Scale Analysis of River Flood Risk of UNESCO World Heritage Sites

Abstract: Floods can significantly affect Cultural Heritage with consequences that might not easily be repaired, given the unicity of this type of exposed asset. Flood losses are both tangible and intangible since communities rely on cultural heritage for its historical, spiritual, aesthetic, and socio-economic values. This work aims at examining river flood risk of UNESCO tangible World Heritage (UNWH) sites to identify the most at risk assets with a risk matrix approach entailing hazard, exposure, and vulnerability at… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
(56 reference statements)
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“…Despite these efforts, flood events have had a significant impact on cultural heritage and historic centres in recent years (Holicky & Sykora, 2010; Lanza, 2003; Vojinovic et al, 2016), and the trend continues to increase. A recent study analysing 1121 sites as of March 2021 shows that 35% of natural and 21% of cultural and mixed UNESCO Tangible World Heritage sites are in geographical areas that are likely to be affected by flood hazards (Arrighi, 2021). This represents a significant threat since these assets combine high cultural value with a series of characteristics that make them potentially vulnerable to physical, chemical, and biological degradation because of moisture ingress (Sesana et al, 2021; Stephenson & D'Ayala, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite these efforts, flood events have had a significant impact on cultural heritage and historic centres in recent years (Holicky & Sykora, 2010; Lanza, 2003; Vojinovic et al, 2016), and the trend continues to increase. A recent study analysing 1121 sites as of March 2021 shows that 35% of natural and 21% of cultural and mixed UNESCO Tangible World Heritage sites are in geographical areas that are likely to be affected by flood hazards (Arrighi, 2021). This represents a significant threat since these assets combine high cultural value with a series of characteristics that make them potentially vulnerable to physical, chemical, and biological degradation because of moisture ingress (Sesana et al, 2021; Stephenson & D'Ayala, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Floods present significant challenges globally, with particular prominence in numerous regions [1,2], notably within tropical locales such as Indonesia [3,4]. The susceptibility of Indonesia to floods is attributed primarily to its geographical positioning, which is exposed to extreme meteorological phenomena including intense rainfall and typhoons [5,6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, cultural heritage can be severely affected by flooding with the peculiarity that (i) the direct tangible losses, such as the detachment of painted surfaces, can be irreversible, (ii) the intangible losses, i.e. historical, spiritual, aesthetic, and social values affected, often lead to indirect economic losses, including loss of livelihoods [12][13][14]; [24] and (iii) replacement costs are hardly estimated for assets which are unique and outside of the market. These challenging aspects make flood risk assessment of cultural heritage rarely applied.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The examples of flood damage and risk analysis to cultural heritage can be subdivided by the scale of analysis from global to singleasset. Flood risk of cultural heritage has been recently analysed at global scale for UNESCO World Heritage Sites (UNWH) [12] showing that 21% of UNWH cultural sites are exposed to floods and 2% is at extreme flood risk. Analyses have been carried out at regional scale in Spain and at national scale in Portugal with a semi-quantitative approach based on hazard maps and vulnerability classification of heritage typology [16,17].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%